The clinic served some of the city's most difficult-to-reach youth — teenagers without stable housing who rely on street-accessible care for primary health, mental health, and harm-reduction services. Those patients will now need to find alternative providers in a system that is already strained.

The cuts trace to the Trump administration's federal budget reductions, which have cascaded through local nonprofits and city-contracted service providers over the past several months. San Francisco has faced repeated gaps in youth and homeless services funding as federal grants have been frozen, reduced, or rescinded.

The Mayor's Office and the Department of Public Health have not yet announced a replacement plan or a bridge-funding strategy. The city's budget for the current fiscal year did not include a contingency line for this type of federal withdrawal, according to publicly available budget documents.

The Board of Supervisors has held hearings on federal funding disruptions to city services, but no emergency appropriation for this specific clinic has been introduced as of publication.

What to watch: Whether the Mayor's Office or DPH identify emergency local funding before the clinic's doors close. The Board's Budget and Appropriations Committee meets regularly and could take up a supplemental if the administration requests one. The comment period on the city's next budget cycle is also open — advocates have already flagged youth homeless services as a priority gap. The closure date has not been publicly confirmed.